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As noted on the page for Mozart's string trio, also, the string trio that would have predominated before Mozart's one complete effort in the genre was the 2-violin (and viola or bass) trio that Boccherini wrote so many of, not the violin-viola-cello trio that Wenzel Pichl wrote perhaps the first substantial example of and which only later became the norm. Pleyel is a composer of a later generation, a pupil of Haydn, wrote his many quartets and trios (and piano trios and duos and...) in the last quarter of the century... poor example. Schissel | Sound the Note!02:31, 15 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In hymnals, which are pretty much the only place you'll find his music anymore, more often than not his name is given as "Felice de' Giardini"; I created a redirect to accommodate this, but I think it should probably be mentioned in the first line of the article, too. I notice that the Oxford DNB article (linked to in this article) bizarrely gives the name as '"Giardini [Degiardino], Felice" (note not only the initial De but the final o!]. --Haruo (talk) 19:23, 18 October 2013 (UTC)[reply]